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Systems of Mating:

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Systems of Mating:
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Systems of Mating:



the rules by which pairs of

gametes are chosen from the

local gene pool to be united in a

zygote with respect to a particular

locus or genetic system.

Systems of Mating:

A deme is not defined by geography but rather by

a shared system of mating. Depending upon the

geographical scale involved and the individuals’

dispersal and mating abilities, a deme may

correspond to the entire species or to a

subpopulation restricted to a small local region.

The Hardy-Weinberg model assumes one

particular system of mating – random mating –

but many other systems of mating exist.

Some Common Systems of Mating:

• Random Mating

• Inbreeding (mating between biological

relatives)

• Assortative Mating (preferential mating

between phenotypically similar individuals)

• Disassortative Mating (preferential mating

between phenotypically dissimilar

individuals)

Inbreeding: One Word, Several

Meanings



Inbreeding is mating between biological

relatives. Two individuals are related if

among the ancestors of the first individual

are one or more ancestors of the second

individual.

Inbreeding: One Word, Several

Meanings

• Inbreeding Can Be Measured by Identity by

Descent, Either for Individuals or for a Population

(Because of shared common ancestors, two

individuals could share genes at a locus that are

identical copies of a single ancestral gene)

• Inbreeding Can Be Measured by Deviations from

Random Mating in a Deme (either the tendency to

preferentially mate with relatives or to

preferentially avoid mating with relatives relative

to random mating)

Identity by Descent

Some alleles are identical because they

are replicated descendants of a single

ancestral allele

Pedigree Inbreeding, F

• Occurs when biological relatives mate

• Two individuals are related if among the ancestors

of the first individual are one or more ancestors of

the second individual.

• Because the father and the mother share a

common ancestor, they can both pass on copies of

a homologous gene that are identical by descent to

their offspring.

• Such offspring are said to be homozygous due to

identity by descent.

Pedigree Inbreeding Is Measured

by F = Probability of

Homozygosity due to Identity by

Descent at a Randomly Chosen

Autosomal Locus



F is Called the “Inbreeding

Coefficient”

Aa

A A

1 1

Simplify Pedigree 2 2

by Excluding

B C A B C A

Individuals

Who Cannot

Contribute to 1 1

Identity by 2 2

D Descent D

AA

(or aa)



Probability(D = AA) = ( 1/2)4 = 1/16



Probability(D=AA or D=aa) = 1/16 + 1/16 = 1/8

A'a' Aa

A' A A' A

1 1 1 1

Simplify Pedigree 2 2 2 2

by Splitting into

B C Mutually Exclusive

A' B C A' OR A B C A

Loops That Can

Contribute to 1 1 1 1

Identity by 2 2 2 2

D Descent D D

A'A' AA

(or a'a') (or aa)





Probability Identical by Descent = 1/8 + 1/8 = 1/4

F is calculated for individuals as a function of

their pedigree (e.g., Speke’s gazelle)

System of Mating refers to a

deme, not individuals.



Therefore, F is not a measure of

the system of mating.



This does not mean that pedigree

inbreeding has no population or

evolutionary implications.

F displays strong interactions with rare, recessive

alleles and epistatic gene complexes.

Consider first a model in which a recessive allele is lethal when

homozygous.





•B = the sum over all loci of the probability that a gamete drawn

from the gene pool bears a recessive lethal allele at a particular

locus.

•Alternatively, B = the average number of lethal alleles over all loci

borne by a gamete in the gene pool.

•BF = the rate of occurrence of both gametes bearing lethal alleles

that are identical by descent, thereby resulting in the death of the

inbred individual.

Consider first a model in which a recessive allele is

lethal when homozygous.

•The number of times an inbred individual will be identical-by-

descent for a lethal allele will often follow a Poisson distribution.

•e-BF = the probability that an individual has exactly 0 lethal genes

that are identical-by-descent and therefore homozygous.

•-A = the natural logarithm of the probability of not dying from any

cause other then being homozgyous for a lethal recessive allele that

is identical-by-descent, so e-A = the probability of not dying from

something else.

•e-BFe-A = e-(A+BF) = probability of an individual with F being alive.

•ln(Probability of an individual with F being alive) = -A - BF

Consider first a model in which a recessive allele is

lethal when homozygous.





•ln(Probability of an individual with F being alive) = -A - BF

•Because BF>0, the above equation describes inbreeding

depression, the reduction of a beneficial trait (such as viability or

birth weight) with increasing levels of pedigree inbreeding.

•To detect and describe inbreeding depression, pool together all the

animals in a population with the same F to estimate the probability

of being alive, and then regress the ln(prob. of being alive) vs. F.

Inbreeding Depression in Speke’s gazelle

F displays strong interactions with rare, recessive

alleles and epistatic gene complexes.

Example of epistasis: synthetic lethals.



•Knock-out (complete loss of function) mutations were induced for

virtually all of the 6200 genes in the yeast (Saccharomyces

cerevisiae) genome (Tong et al. 2001. Sci. 294:2364-2368).

•>80% of these knock-out mutations were not lethal when made

homozygous through identity by descent and classified

“nonessential”

•Extensive lethality emerged when yeast strains were bred that bore

homozygous pairs of mutants from this “nonessential” class.

•Therefore, B = the number of “lethal equivalents” rather than the

number of actual lethal alleles.

F displays strong interactions with rare, recessive

alleles and epistatic gene complexes.

•2B = the number of lethal equivalents in heterozygous condition

that a living animal is expected to bear.

•For Speke’s gazelles, the average number of lethal equivalents for

one-year survivorship borne by the founding animals of this herd is

therefore 7.5 lethal equivalents per animal.

•Humans from the United States and Europe yield values of 2B

between 5-8.

•Therefore, even small amounts of pedigree inbreeding in a

population may increase the incidence of some types of genetic

disease by orders of magnitude in the pedigree-inbred subset of the

population (e.g., 0.05% of matings in the US are between cousins,

but 18-24% of albinos in the US come from cousin matings vs. an

overall incidence of 0.006%).

System of Mating Inbreeding, f

• F is calculated for individuals from pedigree

data.

• Demes are defined by a shared system of

mating, but this is a population level concept.

• Therefore, we need another definition of

inbreeding at the level of a deme to describe

the population incidence of matings between

relatives.

Inbreeding as a Deviation from Random Mating



A a

Gene Pool

p q = 1-p



Maternal Gamete

A a

p q

A AA Aa

Paternal Gamete









p p2 + pq-

a aA aa

q qp- q2 +

Genotype Frequencies that Deviate

From Random Mating due to 

AA Aa aa

p2 + 2pq-2 q2 +



Define f = (pq)





AA Aa aa

p2 +pqf 2pq(1-f) q2 +pqf



Can Estimate f = 1-Freq(Aa)(2pq)

f = panmictic index, but usually

called the “inbreeding coefficient”

• Measures the rules by which gametes unite at the

level of the deme

• Is a measure of system of mating

• Random mating is a special case where f=0

• Inbreeding is a special case where f > 0

• Avoidance of inbreeding is a special case where

f 0, and the average F

= 0.149

• Therefore, this herd of Speke’s Gazelle is One of

the Most Highly Inbred Mammalian Populations

Know.

• A genetic survey in 1982 yielded f = -0.3

• Therefore, this herd of Speke’s Gazelle is a

Mammalian Population That Strongly Avoids

Inbreeding.

• CONTRADICTION?

Inbreeding (F) in a Human Population

Strongly Avoiding Inbreeding (f)



Tristan da Cunha

Impact of f

• Can greatly affect genotype frequencies,

particularly that of homozygotes for rare

alleles: e.g., let q =.001, then q2 = 0.000001

Now let f = 0.01, then q2+pqf = 0.000011

• f is NOT an evolutionary force by itself:

p’ = (1)(p2+pqf) + (.5)[2pq(1-f)]

= p2+pq + pqf - pqf

= p(p+q) = p

A contrast between F, the pedigree inbreeding coefficient,

and f, the system-of-mating inbreeding coefficient



Property F f

Data Used Pedigree Data Genotype

Frequency Data

Type of Measure Probability Correlation

Coefficient

Range 0≤F≤1 -1 ≤ f ≤ 1



Level Individual Deme



Biological Probability of System of

Meaning Identity–by–De- Mating or HW

scent Deviation

Assortative Mating



occurs when individuals with similar

phenotypes are more likely to mate

than expected under random pairing

in the population

Assortative Mating









Reynolds, R. Graham & Fitzpatrick, Benjamin M. Evolution 61 (9), 2253-2259.

100% Assortative Mating For A Codominant, Single Locus Phenotype



AA Aa aa

Zygotes

GAA GAa Gaa

Phenotype 1 1 1

Production



Phenotypes of TAA TAa Taa

Adult Population GAA GAa Gaa

Mate Choice 1 1 1

AA X AA Aa X Aa aa X aa

Mated Adults GAA GAa Gaa

Meiosis & 1 1/ 1/2 1/ 1

4 4

Fertilization



AA Aa aa

Zygotes

GAA+GAa/4 GAa/2 Gaa+GAa/4

100% Assortative Mating For A Codominant, Single Locus Phenotype



AA Aa aa

Zygotes

GAA GAa Gaa

p = (1)GAA+(1/2)GAa 1 1 1



Phenotypes of TAA TAa Taa

Adult Population GAA GAa Gaa

Mate Choice 1 1 1

AA X AA Aa X Aa aa X aa

Mated Adults GAA GAa Gaa

p’ = (1)(GAA+ GAa/4)+(1/2)GAa/2 1 1/ 1/2 1/ 1

4 4



p’ = GAA+ GAa/2 = p

AA Aa aa

Zygotes

GAA+GAa/4 GAa/2 Gaa+GAa/4

100% Assortative Mating For A Codominant, Single Locus Phenotype



AA Aa aa

Zygotes

GAA GAa Gaa

Gen. 0

1 1/ 1/2 1/ 1

4 4







AA Aa aa

Zygotes

Gen. 1

GAA+GAa/4 GAa/2 Gaa+GAa/4









Note, GAa(1)= 1/2GAa(1) => GAa(i)= (1/2)iGAa(0)



As i  , GAa(equilibrium)  0





AA aa

At equilibrium: GAA+GAa/2 = p Gaa+GAa/2 = q

Profound, Early Onset Deafness

• Assortative Mating Rates Vary From 80% to 94%

in USA and Europe.

• About half of the cases are due to accidents and

disease

• The other half of the cases are due to

homozygosity for a recessive allele at any one of

35 loci.

• Half of the genetic cases are due to homozygosity

for a recessive allele at the GJB2 locus that

encodes the gap-junction protein connexin-26,

with q  0.01 in European and USA populations.

GJB2 locus, Alleles A and a

• Frequency of a is about 0.01 in U.S.A. &

Europe

• Under random mating expect an aa

genotype frequency of (0.01)2 = 0.0001 who

will be deaf

• Actual incidence of deafness due to aa is

0.0003 to 0.0005 (as if f=0.02 to 0.04)

• 3 to 5 times more children are deaf due to

this gene because of assortative mating.

GJB2 locus, Alleles A and a

• Only a quarter of the people with profound

early onset deafness are aa.

• Within matings of deaf people, therefore

expect (1/4)(1/4) = 1/16 to be aa X aa.

• But 1/6 of the children of deaf couples are aa!

• In many of these couples, one of the parents is

deaf due to homozygosity for a recessive allele

at another locus, yet this person is also Aa at

the GJB2 locus.

GJB2 locus, Alleles A and a

• Consider a second locus with alleles B and b such

that bb is deaf and frequency of b is 0.0001.

• Under random mating equilibrium, expected

frequency of ab gametes is (0.01)(0.0001) =

0.000001

• But assortative mating implies that the rare bb

individuals will mate 1/4 of the time with aa

individuals, and the children of such matings can

produce ab gametes.

• THEREFORE, ASSORTATIVE MATING

CREATES LINKAGE DISEQUILIBRIUM!

2-Locus, 2-Allele 100% Assortative Mating With Additive Phenotypes

Equilibrium Populations Possible Under

a 2-Locus, 2-Allele 100% Assortative

Mating With Additive Phenotypes

Initial Gene Pool



Genotypes pA = pB pA pB







AB/AB pA pA pB



Ab/Ab 0 0 pA - pB



aB/aB 0 pB - pA 0



ab/ab pb pb pa





Note, can start with D=0, but all equilibrium populations have |D’|=1

Properties of Assortative Mating

• Increases the Frequency of Homozygotes Relative to

Hardy-Weinberg For Loci Contributing to the

Phenotype Or For Loci Correlated For Any Reason to

the Phenotype

• Does Not Change Allele Frequencies --Therefore Is Not

An Evolutionary Forces at the Single Locus Level

• Assortative Mating Creates Disequilibrium Among Loci

that Contribute to the Phenotype and Is A Powerful

Evolutionary Force at the Multi-Locus Level

• Multiple Equilibria Exist at the Multi-Locus Level And

The Course of Evolution Is Constrained By the Initial

Gene Pool: historical factors are a determinant of the

course of evolution

Assortative Mating & Inbreeding

• Both Increase Frequency of Homozygotes Relative to

Hardy-Weinberg (result in f > 0)

• Increased Homozygosity Under Assortative Mating

Occurs Only For Loci Contributing to the Phenotype Or

For Loci Correlated For Any Reason to the Phenotype;

Inbreeding Increases Homozygosity for All Loci

• Neither Changes Allele Frequencies --Therefore They

Are Not Evolutionary Forces at the Single Locus Level

• Assortative Mating Creates Disequilibrium Among Loci

that Contribute to the Phenotype; Inbreeding Slows

Down the Decay of Disequilibrium, but Does Not

Create Any Disequilibrium.

ASSORTATIVE MATING, LINKAGE

DISEQUILIBRIUM AND ADMIXTURE

• Assortative mating directly affects the genotype and

gamete frequencies of the loci that contribute to the

phenotype for which assortative mating is occurring and

of any loci in linkage disequilibrium with them.

• Admixture occurs when two or more genetically

distinct subpopulations are mixed together and begin

interbreeding.

• Admixture induces disequilibrium, so assortative mating

for any phenotype associated with the parental

subpopulations can potentially affect the genotype

frequencies at many loci not directly affect the assorting

phenotype.

ASSORTATIVE MATING, LINKAGE

DISEQUILIBRIUM AND ADMIXTURE

Subpopulation 1 Subpopulation 2

AB Ab aB ab AB Ab aB ab



0.03 0.07 0.27 0.63 0.63 0.27 0.07 0.03







D = (0.03)(0.63)-(0.07)(0.27) = 0 D = (0.63)(0.03)-(0.27)(0.07) = 0









Combined Population (50:50 Mix)

AB Ab aB ab



0.33 0.17 0.17 0.33





D = (0.33)(0.33)-(0.17)(0.17) = 0.08

ASSORTATIVE MATING, LINKAGE

DISEQUILIBRIUM AND ADMIXTURE



• Assortative mating for any trait that differentiates the

original subpopulations (even non genetic) reduces

heterozygosity at all loci with allele frequency

differences between the original subpopulations.

• The rate of dissipation of D in the admixed population is

therefore (1-r).

• Therefore, disassortative mating rapidly destroys

the linkage disequilibrium created by admixture.

Disassortative Mating and Admixture

Disassortative Mating and Admixture

Diagnostic Yanomama Borabuk Makiritare

Allele Yanomama





Dia 0.00 0.06 0.04





Apa 0.00 0.08 0.05

Systems of Matings

Systems of mating can be potent

evolutionary forces, both by

themselves and in interactions with

other evolutionary factors. In

subsequent lectures we will examine

additional interactions between

system of mating and other

evolutionary forces.


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